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The Trump administration is considering labeling China’s oppression of Uighur Muslims in the western Xinjiang province “genocide,” Politico reports.

Tensions between the United States and China have increased in 2020 due to the coronavirus pandemic, disagreements about trade and Hong Kong’s autonomy. An accusation of genocide would inflame those tensions further.

The White House National Security Council condemned China’s actions in the Xinjiang province on Tuesday.

“Beijing’s atrocities against the Uighurs include horrific acts against women including forced abortion, forced sterilization and other coercive birth control methods, state-sponsored forced labor, sexual violence including through rape in detention, compulsory home-stays by Han officials, and forced marriages,” John Ullyot, a National Security Council spokesperson, told Fox News in a statement. “The Chinese Communist Party’s atrocities also include the largest incarceration of an ethnic minority since World War II.”

CHINA USES MUSLIM UIGHUR FORCED LABOR TO MASS PRODUCE CORONAVIRUS PPE EXPORTED GLOBALLY

A June report by Adrian Zenz for the Jamestown Foundation argued that Beijing started a campaign of mass sterilizations and forced family separations among Uighurs in 2017 to decrease their natural population growth.

“These findings raise serious concerns as to whether Beijing’s policies in Xinjiang represent, in fundamental respects, what might be characterized as a demographic campaign of genocide per the text of Section D, Article II of the U.N. Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide,” Zenz wrote.

Last month, the Trump administration imposed sanctions and visa restrictions on multiple Chinese Communist Party officials believed to be responsible for human rights abuses in the Xinjiang province. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said those abuses “include forced labor, arbitrary mass detention, and forced population control, and attempts to erase their culture and Muslim faith.”

The State Department did not respond to a request for comment Tuesday.

CHINA SUBJECTS MUSLIM MINORITIES TO FORCED BIRTH CONTROL, ABORTIONS TO SUPPRESS POPULATION, REPORT SAYS 

International organizations also condemned Beijing for its treatment of Uighurs. Gay McDougall, the vice chairman of a United Nations anti-discrimination committee, said in 2018 that her organization has received “numerous and credible reports” of mass human rights abuses in the Xinjaing province.

“There are estimates that upwards of a million people are being held in so-called counter-extremism centers and another 2 million have been forced into so-called re-education camps for political and cultural indoctrination,” McDougall said at a hearing.

China has repeatedly denied that human rights abuses have taken place in the Xinjiang province. The Chinese embassy in Washington, D.C. did not immediately respond to a request for comment Tuesday.

CHINA CAUGHT USING MALWARE TO SPY ON UIGHURS AS PART OF CAMPAIGN TO CURB  THE MUSLIM POPULATION

Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden has been outspoken on the campaign trail about China’s internment of Uighur Muslims.

“The unspeakable oppression that Uighurs and other ethnic minorities have suffered at the hands of China’s authoritarian government is genocide and Joe Biden stands against it in the strongest terms,” Biden campaign spokesman Andrew Bates told Politico. “If the Trump administration does indeed choose to call this out for what it is, as Joe Biden already did, the pressing question is what will Donald Trump do to take action. He must also apologize for condoning this horrifying treatment of Uighurs."

Former Trump National Security Adviser John Bolton alleged in his memoir earlier this year that President Trump encouraged Chinese President Xi Jinping in 2019 to continue building the internment camps where Uighur Muslims are detained.

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President Trump dismissed Bolton’s claims in an interview with the Wall Street Journal, calling him a “liar” and saying that “everybody in the White House hated John Bolton.”

President Trump also pointed to his administration's tough stance on China, and the fact that he signed the Uighur Human Rights Policy Act of 2020 in June, which “imposes sanctions on foreign individuals and entities responsible for human rights abuses in China's Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous region and requires various reports on the topic.”

The Associated Press contributed to this report.